Chinese law books written by judge behind stolen court papers scandal recalled by publisher
- Wang Linqing’s works taken off shelves and returned to warehouses
- Beijing lawyer who followed case said move was a step ‘too far’

Law books written by a Chinese judge were removed from shelves after he made a surprise televised confession about his part in a scandal at the country’s highest court that he helped bring to light.
More than 10 books written by Wang Linqing, a former assistant judge to the Supreme People’s Court, were recalled by his publisher on Friday, employees at the company and bookstores said.
Wang, who helped to expose the loss of court documents in a long-running contract dispute case in December, made his first public appearance in more than a month on state television on Friday.
To the surprise of many, the 45-year-old claimed he took court papers home out of spite after he was told that he would no longer be handling the case.
“I took them away partly to vent my anger, and partly to stop other [judges] from handling the case,” he said on CCTV.